or other plants, correspond with us for lowest prices. 
37 
amount to $20.00 or more. If you al¬ 
ready take the Fruit Grower, or prefer 
the Farm Journal of Philadelphia, we 
will send the Farm Journal for five 
years in place of the Fruit Grower. 
These two papers are the leading 
journals of their class and should be 
in every farmer’s home. Both of these 
journals have been unusually fair to 
me and my business and this is why I 
am helping boost their circulation. If 
you wish to subscribe and pay cash, 
the price is $1.00 per year for the 
Fruit Grower and $1.00 for five years 
for the Farm Journal. If after reaa- 
ing these papers for a year, you do not 
quantity by letter. These goods are 
put up by the best manufacturers in 
the United States. 
ASSISTANTS WANTED. 
We are in constant need of help to 
carry on our large and increasing busi¬ 
ness. We take on new hands at most 
any time and teach them all the de¬ 
tails of the business and they can re¬ 
main with us or go elsewhere to other 
employers or engage in the business 
themselves. We take men and w’omen, 
young and old, with no experience, and 
in a few years teach them more than 
they could learn in a lifetime at school, 
at the same time, paying them good 
J^larket basket of Duiilia blooms plc-ked at k. J. Karmer's plac*' 
(Jctober lOlh 
say that the investment is a good one, 
we will return your money. 
FERTILIZERS AND SPRAYING 
MATERIALS. 
We can supply all kinds of com¬ 
mercial fertilizers, such as Nitrate of 
Soda, Suphate and Muriate of Potash, 
South Caroline Hock, ground bone and 
mixed fertilizers of all formulas. Also 
spraying machines and spraying ma¬ 
terials of all kinds. Write for prices 
on fertilizers, spray pumps, Arsenate 
of Lead, Lime Sulphur solution. Pre¬ 
pared Bordeaux Mixture, etc. We do 
not issue a catalogue on this material, 
but will quote prices on any particular 
wages. Everybody around us learns to 
do all kinds of work whether in the 
office, packing shed or on the fruit 
farm. If you want a place and are 
willing to work, write us. 
The St. Regis Everbearing Raspberry 
also known as “Hanere” and “Second 
Cropper,” seems to be worthy of more 
than usual attention. We have not 
fruited this berry but we have letters 
from prominent authorities who speak 
very highly of it. A leading nursery¬ 
man of Hammonton, N. J., writes us 
that this raspberry is grown largely by 
the Italians of Hammonton, who bring 
in quantities of the fruit very late in 
